Here are 4 videos to watch as soon as possible. I've watched them more than once and each time I view each one, I learn something new.
a. “Motivatoinal Interviewing for Busy Clinicians: Mr. Smith’s smoking evolution” by a primary care internist, Damara Gutnick, MD, that lasts 10 minutes. It’s creatively and entertainingly done and demonstrates how MI can be done with an economy of time in an office based setting.
b. “Motivational Interviewing, An Introduction” by Bill Matulich, PhD, that lasts 17:23. It provides a nice overview and summarizes the main points of MI.
c. “Can listening save time?, a story of Dr. Ng Min Yin” that describes a physician applying what she has learned after a MI workshop to help a challenging patient. (7:57)
d. An exercise to do with a very moving and powerful video from the Cleveland Clinic, “Empathy, the Human Connection to Patient Care”, lasting 4:25. I'd recommend watching it more than once. While watching, pick 1 or 2 people in the video, and with what you’ve learned about, and and are learning about OARS from the preceding videos: open ended questioning, affirming, reflecting, and summarizing, imagine you are meeting them in your office or clinic or on a home visit. Apply these microskills to the imaginary conversation you might have if you were caring for them in some manner. You can do this alone or with someone else who might role-play one of the people you interview for a minute or two.
Presentations
Table of Contents
PBL presentation Motivational Interviewing for Busy Residents - Saffier - 2014
Readings
Books:"Motivational Interviewing in Health Care. Helping patients change behavior" by Stephen Rollnick, William Miller and Christopher Butler, Guilford Press (about $30).
Articles:
MI_Eight_Tasks_in_learning_chart_summary.pdf
MI_Eight_Stages_of_MI_article.pdf
MI_Changing_behaviour.pdf
MI_Interaction_Techniques.pdf
Behavioral Change, Motivational Interviewing.pdf
Videos
Here are 4 videos to watch as soon as possible. I've watched them more than once and each time I view each one, I learn something new.a. “Motivatoinal Interviewing for Busy Clinicians: Mr. Smith’s smoking evolution” by a primary care internist, Damara Gutnick, MD, that lasts 10 minutes. It’s creatively and entertainingly done and demonstrates how MI can be done with an economy of time in an office based setting.
b. “Motivational Interviewing, An Introduction” by Bill Matulich, PhD, that lasts 17:23. It provides a nice overview and summarizes the main points of MI.
c. “Can listening save time?, a story of Dr. Ng Min Yin” that describes a physician applying what she has learned after a MI workshop to help a challenging patient. (7:57)
d. An exercise to do with a very moving and powerful video from the Cleveland Clinic, “Empathy, the Human Connection to Patient Care”, lasting 4:25. I'd recommend watching it more than once. While watching, pick 1 or 2 people in the video, and with what you’ve learned about, and and are learning about OARS from the preceding videos: open ended questioning, affirming, reflecting, and summarizing, imagine you are meeting them in your office or clinic or on a home visit. Apply these microskills to the imaginary conversation you might have if you were caring for them in some manner. You can do this alone or with someone else who might role-play one of the people you interview for a minute or two.
Online Course
National Health Care for the Homeless: Motivational Interviewing - 4 ModulesThis page has been edited 5 times. The last modification was made by -